In 1999, I went to the Byron Nelson Invitational golf tournament in Irving, TX and followed around a 19 year old golfer who was making his professional debut - Sergio Garcia. Just a month earlier, I had watched Sergio take home the Silver Cup at the Masters Tournament for having the lowest score of any amateur. At the time, I was only a few years older than Sergio himself and I was fascinated with the joy and youthful exuberance he brought to the game. In the first round of the Byron Nelson tournament, Sergio fired a 7 under par 63 and I immediately became a fan.
Later that year, the rest of the world saw the same excitement when Sergio battled Tiger Woods in the 1999 PGA Championship at Medinah Country Club outside of Chicago. Sergio came close to capturing his first major title that week, finishing in 2nd place behind Tiger. The golf world thought he would become a potential rival to Tiger similar to what Jack Nicklaus had with Tom Watson or Lee Trevino. No one at the time would have guessed that Sergio would come so close over the next 18 years finishing second 3 more times with 22 top 10 finishes and no major titles. He would win tournaments - 9 on the PGA Tour and 15 on the European Tour. He also became one of the key members of 8 European Ryder Cup Teams with an impressive 19-11-7 record.
I watched a large majority of the Masters this past weekend and saw a different Sergio. He seemed more focused, mature and calm. Not letting bogeys effect him the way it had in the past. Instead of fading when faced with adversity, he fought back to win his first major title.
I created a similar visualization as part of a dashboard that I did after the 2015 Open Championship, but this time I wanted use it to tell the story of the 2017 Masters and his duel with Justin Rose.